CEF

Will Q2 Begin with a Lurch?

– Posted in: Commentary for the Week of March 8 Free

You gotta give DaBoyz credit for turning stocks around yesterday, since buyers appeared to have taken the day off. Nor was there much bullish energy as the day wore on – only the nervous drum beat of short-covering ahead of the final trading day of Q1.  It was all window dressing, to be sure, and although the Dow Industrials ended the day 20 points higher, the modest gain belied the dark magic that eventually spirited the blue chip average into positive territory.  After being down as much as 93 points early in the session, the Indoos began to inch their way higher around noon.  Of course, most of the gains came during the final hour, as is so often the case. Bears apparently had second thoughts about trusting Friday to be mellow, especially a Friday coinciding with the end of a fiscal quarter. With earnings growth apparently slowing down, will the broad averages continue to waft higher in the weeks ahead?  Perhaps. Whatever your view on the economy, keep in mind that there is no story, even weakening earnings, that cannot be spun bullishly. The optimists would interpret this as meaning companies have hit a wall on profit margins and will soon start hiring to keep up with sales. A darker view would hold that stagnant household incomes and still-falling home prices are about to smother the consumption side of growth. Yes, we too have noticed that credit card teaser rates are back down to 0.0%, sometimes with no origination fee. But the asset growth on which this seductive scam has always thrived is simply not there. ‘Time for Defense’ Meanwhile, not everyone thinks that higher stock prices are baked in the cake for Q2.  “Traders and investors should use Friday, March 30, to get defensive,” read an e-mail we